By Izza Imdad
Moving out sounds exciting at first. You picture quiet mornings, your own space, and no one asking why you’re still asleep at noon. But a few days in, reality walks in — with bills, leaky taps, and a fridge that hums like it’s plotting something.
That fridge became my first roommate. It growled at night, clicked randomly, and sometimes went silent just to mess with me. I’d open the door to check if it was still alive, pretending I had everything under control. I didn’t.
Then there were the walls. When I moved in, they looked fine — almost welcoming. A month later, cracks showed up like they’d been waiting for me. The paint started peeling, the bathroom tap started its own beat, and the light switches turned moody. You start noticing sounds you never paid attention to before.
And somehow, you learn new trades. You’re a part-time plumber, an accidental electrician, and an eggshell-removal expert. Who knew breaking an egg cleanly could make you feel like a functioning adult?
Money is its own adventure. You make a budget, then break it on groceries that somehow cost more than your Wi-Fi bill — which, by the way, is now a basic need, not a luxury. You start measuring rent in cups of chai and calculating bills in “how many fans can I turn off” units.
But in between the chaos, something shifts. You learn to fix things — the loose wires, the broken handles, the small parts of yourself that needed fixing too. And when you finally sit with that first cup of tea in your own kitchen, even with the fridge growling nearby, it feels worth it.
Adult life isn’t about having it all figured out. It’s about learning to live with the fridge ghost — and realizing it’s just a part of the soundtrack of growing up.
This article was written by Izza Imdad, a Pakistani student currently studying in Tasmania, Australia.
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